O Conde Drácula se move da Transilvânia para Wismar, estendendo a Peste Negra por todo o país. Somente uma mulher de coração puro pode acabar com seu reino de horror.O Conde Drácula se move da Transilvânia para Wismar, estendendo a Peste Negra por todo o país. Somente uma mulher de coração puro pode acabar com seu reino de horror.O Conde Drácula se move da Transilvânia para Wismar, estendendo a Peste Negra por todo o país. Somente uma mulher de coração puro pode acabar com seu reino de horror.
- Prêmios
- 5 vitórias e 8 indicações no total
- Town official
- (as Ryk de Gooyer)
- Lord of the Manor
- (não creditado)
- Hand and Feet in Box with Rats
- (não creditado)
Enredo
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe film implies on several occasions that Dracula's castle exists in a type of shadow dream world and it is in this reality which Harker finds himself at the beginning of the film. This is implied by statements from the gypsies that Dracula's castle is in fact merely a crumbling ruin with these ruins seen while the sun is setting, although Harker finds himself in a fully intact castle. Harker himself even notes that the castle "doesn't seem real" and is haunted by the image of a violin-playing boy who is suggested to be either a phantom or ghost.
- Erros de gravação(at around 58 mins) When the captain of the ship is writing in his log he says they left the Caspian Sea, which is landlocked and nearly 1000 miles away from the port in Bulgaria where the voyage started. Bulgaria is on the Black Sea.
- Citações
Count Dracula: [subtitled version] Time is an abyss... profound as a thousand nights... Centuries come and go... To be unable to grow old is terrible... Death is not the worst... Can you imagine enduring centuries, experiencing each day the same futilities...
- Versões alternativasThe English-language version was only available in a shorter cut until 2000, which was about 10 minutes shorter.
- ConexõesEdited into Spisok korabley (2008)
- Trilhas sonorasRheingold
Written by Richard Wagner
Performed by Wiener Philharmoniker
Conducted by Georg Solti (as Sir Georg Solti)
Decca LC 0171
Anyone who comes to this with a previous experience of Herzog's style will realize that the German infant terrible has made the material unmistakeably his. Like most of his films, Noferatu is like a film about a dream about a documentary depicting weird people doing weird things - yet, beneath the minimalism of the plot and the docu-style naturalism of his photography, the movie resonates with the kind of hypnotic power Coppola missed in the alchemical migraine of his '92 version. Filming a medieval German town swept by plague like a grotesque carnival complete with people dancing with goats on tables and having a feast in the middle of a swarm of mice, Herzog goes on to choreograph a heavily made-up Klaus Kinski (looking like a rodent and playing a theatric version of his real half-mad self) through the steps Max Schreck's character took on the deck of the ship in the original movie as though he wants to prove that he can make it look every bit as creepy as Murnau did.
Perhaps reflecting the original in this department, Herzog's Nosferatu is still a pretty uneven film. Parts of it work better than others. When Kinski makes a grand appearance seething malice and despair, the screen is on fire. Grand antics work really well for this kind of character and this kind of movie. Bruno Ganz and Isabelle Adjani have enough charisma to carry the rest of the movie but the story structure occasionally betrays them. When Herzog cuts to Renfield's parts, you can feel the movie loosing steam with every gleeful cackle. When he cuts back to some kind of devilment going on, or even better the surreal stylizations of a bat flying in slow-motion set to Popol Vuh's repetitive drones, the movie comes closer to hitting the right emotional notes. When it achieves that kind of hypnotic, nightmarish vibe, the movie is great; when it doesn't, it's not bad.
And lastly, even though I understand Herzog's dislike for formalism, is there any particular reason why 90% of the movie is shot from eye-level? Makes one wish for the extreme skewed angles of Japanese New Wave directors.
- chaos-rampant
- 11 de abr. de 2009
- Link permanente
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- Países de origem
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- Nosferatu, vampiro de la noche
- Locações de filme
- Delft, Zuid-Holland, Países Baixos(many exteriors)
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 3.451
- Tempo de duração1 hora 47 minutos
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1